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Official statement

For Core Web Vitals (a future ranking signal, announced at least 6 months in advance), Google will analyze the page that real users predominantly view (AMP or standard HTML depending on the user journey). No deployment date has been communicated yet.
29:50
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Extracted from a Google Search Central video

⏱ 55:02 💬 EN 📅 21/08/2020 ✂ 50 statements
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Other statements from this video 49
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  2. 1:46 Can JavaScript really hide your links from Google without destroying them?
  3. 3:43 Is it really necessary to optimize the first link on a page for SEO?
  4. 3:43 Does Google really combine signals from multiple links pointing to the same page?
  5. 5:20 Do site-wide links in the menu and footer really dilute the PageRank of your strategic pages?
  6. 6:22 Is it really necessary to nofollow site-wide links to your legal pages to optimize PageRank?
  7. 7:24 Should you really keep nofollow on your footer links and service pages?
  8. 10:10 Why does Google make it impossible to use Search Console Insights without Analytics?
  9. 11:08 Does Nofollow still affect crawling without passing on PageRank?
  10. 11:08 Does nofollow really block indexing, or can Google still crawl those URLs?
  11. 13:50 Why is Google so tight-lipped about its indexing incidents?
  12. 15:58 Should you really index all paged pages to optimize your SEO?
  13. 15:59 Is it really necessary to index all pagination pages to optimize your SEO?
  14. 19:53 Are URL parameters still an obstacle for organic search?
  15. 19:53 Are URL parameters really a non-issue for SEO anymore?
  16. 21:50 Is it true that Google is blocking the indexing of new sites?
  17. 23:56 Do links in embedded tweets really affect your SEO?
  18. 25:33 Are sitemaps really essential for Google indexing?
  19. 26:03 How does Google really discover your new URLs?
  20. 27:28 Why does Google require a canonical on ALL AMP pages, including standalone ones?
  21. 27:40 Is the rel=canonical really mandatory on all AMP pages, even standalone ones?
  22. 28:09 Should you really implement hreflang across an entire multilingual site?
  23. 28:41 Should you really implement hreflang on every page of a multilingual website?
  24. 29:08 Is it true that AMP is a speed factor for Google?
  25. 29:16 Should you still invest in AMP to optimize speed and ranking?
  26. 30:20 Do Core Web Vitals really measure what your users actually see?
  27. 31:23 Should you manually deindex old pagination URLs after changing your site's architecture?
  28. 31:23 Is it really necessary to manually de-index your old pagination URLs?
  29. 32:08 Is advertising on your site harming your SEO?
  30. 32:48 Does having ads on your site really hurt your Google rankings?
  31. 34:47 Is rel=canonical in syndication really reliable for controlling indexing?
  32. 34:47 Does rel=canonical really protect your syndicated content from ranking theft?
  33. 38:14 Do security alerts in Search Console really block Google's crawling?
  34. 38:14 Can a hacked site lose its crawl budget due to Google security alerts?
  35. 39:20 Have links in guest posts really lost all SEO value?
  36. 39:20 Do guest post links really have no SEO value?
  37. 40:55 Why does Google ignore identical modification dates in your sitemaps?
  38. 40:55 Why does Google ignore the lastmod dates in your XML sitemap?
  39. 42:00 Should you really update the lastmod date of the sitemap for every minor change?
  40. 42:21 Does a poorly configured sitemap really diminish your crawl budget?
  41. 43:00 Can a misconfigured sitemap really cut down your crawl budget?
  42. 44:34 Should you really have to choose between reducing duplicate content and using canonical tags?
  43. 44:34 Is it really necessary to eliminate all duplicate content or should you rely on rel=canonical?
  44. 45:10 Should you really set a crawl limit in Search Console?
  45. 45:40 Should you really let Google decide your crawl limit?
  46. 47:08 Do internal 301 redirects really dilute PageRank?
  47. 47:48 Do cascading internal 301 redirects really drain SEO juice?
  48. 49:53 Can the JavaScript History API really force Google to change your canonical URL?
  49. 49:53 Can Google really treat URL changes made by JavaScript and the History API as redirects?
📅
Official statement from (5 years ago)
TL;DR

Google has confirmed that for Core Web Vitals, measurement will be based on the page version predominantly viewed by real users — whether it's an AMP or a standard HTML page. Specifically, if 80% of your traffic comes from AMP and 20% from standard HTML, it is the performance of the AMP that will count. This approach may create ranking disparities between competing sites based on their technology mix and user journeys.

What you need to understand

Which page version does Google consider for Core Web Vitals?

Google does not measure Core Web Vitals on a theoretical version of your page, but on the one that real users predominantly view. If your site offers an AMP version and a standard HTML version, the engine will analyze the one that receives the most traffic.

This logic changes the game for dual-stack sites. Until now, many practitioners thought that Google would systematically evaluate the canonical version. False. The traffic distribution becomes a decisive factor in performance measurement that will influence ranking.

How can I know which version will be evaluated for my site?

Check your server logs or your analytics tool: which version predominantly serves your visitors? If 70% of your Google traffic comes to AMP via the mobile carousel and 30% to HTML desktop, it’s the AMP performance that will count in the calculation of Core Web Vitals.

The problem is that this mix can vary by sector, devices, countries. An e-commerce site with a strong desktop audience will have a very different profile than a very mobile news media. Google does not provide any specific thresholds: is it 51% that makes the shift happen? 60%? We navigate by sight.

What does this approach reveal about Google’s strategy?

By focusing on the real user experience, Google aligns its ranking criteria with what internet users actually experience. This is consistent with the philosophy of Core Web Vitals: to measure what truly impacts UX, not what a Lighthouse audit shows in a lab.

This statement also confirms that Google continues to push AMP as the preferred format for mobile. If your AMP is predominant and efficient, you win. If it's predominant but slow, you lose. No half measures.

  • Google measures the page version predominantly viewed by real users (AMP or standard HTML).
  • The traffic distribution between versions becomes an indirect ranking factor via Core Web Vitals.
  • No specific thresholds have been communicated to determine which version is "predominant".
  • Dual-stack sites must audit their traffic mix to anticipate which version will be evaluated.
  • This approach emphasizes the importance of optimizing the version that actually serves the most visitors, not necessarily the canonical.

SEO Expert opinion

Is this statement consistent with observed practices on the ground?

Yes, and it's even a rare case of welcome transparency. Google confirms what the data from CrUX already showed: the metrics reported come from real Chrome traffic, not from a crawler. It makes sense that the predominantly viewed version weighs more heavily.

However, we observe a significant gap between AMP and standard HTML performance on some sites. A media client had an AMP at 95/100 Lighthouse and standard desktop HTML at 62. If traffic shifts towards desktop (change in usage, decline of AMP carousel), the Core Web Vitals score will plummet. Google says nothing about the temporal stability of this measure.

What nuances should be added to this statement?

First nuance: Google talks about “predominantly viewed version” but does not specify the time frame nor the geographic granularity. Is it an average over 28 days like CrUX? By device? By country? [To verify] by cross-checking Search Console and CrUX data.

Second nuance: this logic assumes that your site has a stable AMP/HTML mix. If you're rolling out a progressive redesign, moving from 20% to 80% HTML traffic over 3 months, the evaluated version will shift — and potentially cause fluctuations in your ranking during the transition. No official communication on this scenario.

In what scenarios might this rule create side effects?

Imagine a site with an ultra-fast AMP but a terrible desktop HTML. As long as mobile traffic predominates, everything is fine. The day Google changes the display of the AMP carousel (it happens) or a desktop competitor gains market share, traffic shifts — and your Core Web Vitals plummet.

Another case: sites with complex user journeys (progressive web app, single-page application). Google says nothing about multi-page sessions or AJAX navigations. If a user loads the AMP and then navigates in HTML via an internal link, which version counts? Silence.

Caution: this “predominant” approach may mask performance issues on the minority version. If 60% of your traffic is fast AMP and 40% slow HTML, Google will see a good overall score — but 40% of your visitors are having a degraded experience. Don’t neglect the minority version just because it doesn’t count for ranking.

Practical impact and recommendations

What steps should you take to ensure you're measuring the right version?

Your first instinct: segment your traffic in Google Analytics or your log tool. Create “AMP” vs “standard HTML” segments and calculate the distribution over the last 28 days (the likely reference period for CrUX). If the distribution is 70/30, you know which version to focus your optimization efforts on.

Next, cross-check with CrUX data via PageSpeed Insights or BigQuery. Ensure that the LCP, FID, CLS metrics reported align with the predominantly viewed version. If you see a discrepancy between your internal RUM measurements and CrUX, it might be that Google is evaluating a different version than you thought.

What common mistakes should be avoided when optimizing multi-version Core Web Vitals?

Classic mistake: optimizing solely the canonical version thinking it’s the one that will count. If your canonical is in HTML but 80% of traffic comes to AMP, you’re missing the point. First, audit the real mix before investing resources.

Second pitfall: neglecting the coherence of user journeys. A user who lands on a fast AMP and then clicks to a slow HTML page will have a degraded experience — and Google will see that in session metrics. Think complete journey, not isolated page.

How can you track the evolution of this distribution over time?

Set up an automated dashboard that tracks the AMP/HTML ratio weekly. If you observe a shift (e.g., changing from 60/40 to 40/60), anticipate the impact on your Core Web Vitals before the ranking changes.

Also keep an eye on Google announcements about changes in AMP display (carousel, stories, etc.). A change in how results are presented can redistribute traffic between versions — and thus modify the version evaluated for Core Web Vitals.

  • Segment your traffic analytics to identify the predominantly viewed version (AMP vs HTML).
  • Cross-check this data with CrUX metrics to verify consistency.
  • Prioritize optimizing the version that serves the most real traffic, not necessarily the canonical.
  • Do not neglect the minority version: 40% of visitors with a degraded experience remains a business problem.
  • Automate tracking the AMP/HTML ratio to anticipate shifts.
  • Test Core Web Vitals on both versions under real conditions (devices, networks, geos).
Measuring and optimizing Core Web Vitals on a dual-stack site requires a fine analysis of user journeys and constant monitoring of traffic distribution. These cross-version optimizations between AMP and standard HTML can quickly become complex, especially if your site has a hybrid architecture or multi-device journeys. In this context, working with an SEO agency specialized in web performance can streamline tracking, avoid configuration pitfalls, and provide an accurate diagnosis before Core Web Vitals impact your ranking. Personalized support on this type of project ensures you optimize the right version at the right time without wasting resources on unverified assumptions.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

Si mon site a 50% de trafic AMP et 50% HTML, quelle version Google évalue-t-il pour les Core Web Vitals ?
Google n'a pas communiqué de seuil précis. En théorie, il faut une version « majoritaire », donc au-dessus de 50%. Dans un cas 50/50, il est probable que Google agrège les métriques des deux versions, mais aucune confirmation officielle. Surveillez vos données CrUX pour voir quelle version remonte.
Les Core Web Vitals mesurés en lab (Lighthouse) sont-ils différents de ceux utilisés pour le ranking ?
Oui. Lighthouse simule un environnement contrôlé (lab). Pour le ranking, Google utilise les données CrUX issues du trafic réel Chrome (field data). Les scores peuvent varier significativement entre les deux.
Si je désactive l'AMP, mes Core Web Vitals vont-ils chuter immédiatement ?
Non, pas immédiatement. Les données CrUX sont agrégées sur 28 jours glissants. Si vous basculez d'AMP vers HTML, il faudra environ un mois pour que les nouvelles métriques soient prises en compte dans le ranking. Anticipez cette transition.
Google mesure-t-il les Core Web Vitals différemment selon les devices (mobile vs desktop) ?
Oui, CrUX segmente par device. Si votre trafic mobile est majoritairement AMP et votre desktop HTML classique, chaque version sera évaluée pour son device respectif. Le ranking mobile et desktop peut donc diverger.
Dois-je optimiser ma version AMP même si elle représente seulement 30% de mon trafic ?
Oui, pour deux raisons : 30% de visiteurs méritent une bonne expérience, et si cette part augmente (changement d'usage, nouveauté Google), cette version deviendra majoritaire et impactera votre ranking. Ne misez pas tout sur une seule version.
🏷 Related Topics
Domain Age & History AI & SEO JavaScript & Technical SEO Mobile SEO Web Performance

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Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 55 min · published on 21/08/2020

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